Humber Estuary The Humber Estuary Committee Joint members • Anglian Water, Severn-Trent Water, Yorkshire Water National Rivers Authority Guildbourne House Worthing Please return this book on or before last date shown below. Renewals can be obtained by contacting the library. 7 ‘V- * ©N y £r- j ENVIRONMENT AGENCY 062041 \ i v /n n «wvv G U I L D £ : W O h l H i THE WATER QUALITY OF THE HUMBER ESTUARY 1 9 8 6 Report edited for the Humber Estuary Committee by A Edwards, R Freestone and C Urquhart of Yorkshire Water September 1987 Anglian Water Severn-Trent Water Yorkshire Water Ambury Road Abelson House West Riding House Huntingdon 2297 Coventry Road 67 Albion Street Cambridgeshire Birmingham Leeds PEI8 6NZ B26 3PR LSI 5AA SUMMARY The Humber Estuary Committee of the Anglian, Severn-Trent and Yorkshire Water Authorities co-ordinates the water quality management and monitoring of the estuary. Environmental quality objectives based on protecting existing and potential future uses of the water have been established. These are defined by quality standards set for the water column. Routine monitoring programmes, which are supplemented by intensive special surveys, cover the chemical quality of the Humber and its tidal rivers, freshwater river and effluent inputs, metal accumulation in sediments and organisms, and the invertebrate fauna. The results for 1986 show that the outer Estuary is of high quality with a diverse benthic fauna. The main water quality problem is the depletion of dissolved oxygen levels at times of low freshwater flows in the tidal Ouse, Aire and Don and which also affects the lower Trent and upper Humber. Work is in progress or planned for improvements to sewage treatment works and industrial effluent discharges so that the environmental quality standards are fully met. Action is also well advanced to reduce arsenic levels along the north shore of the upper Estuary. CONTENTS Page Summary 1. Introduction 1 2. Management Framework 2 3* Chemical Sampling and Analysis 3 4. Freshwater River and Effluent Input 3 5. Tidal Water Quality 7 6. 1986 Special Survey 9 7. Metals in Sediments and Biota 10 8. Faunal Sampling and Analysis 12 9* Conclusions 16 Appendix 1 Humber Estuary Committee Objectives 18 Appendix 2 Benthic Species list for 1986 21 Figures 2 to 14 Following 25 Publications concerned with the Humber Estuary FIGURES 1. The Humber Estuary and its catchment (Frontispiece) 2. Chemical monitoring stations- - -- - - - • - 3. BOD and Ammonia loads to the Humber Estuary (loads at tidal limits of main rivers) 4. BOD and Ammonia loads from the main effluent inputs 5. HCH in the River Aire at Beal 6. Load of metals discharged to the Humber System 7. Average dissolved oxygen levels for 1976-1980 and 1981-1986 8. Dissolved oxygen levels at selected continuous monitoring stations over the period 15th to 17th June 1986 9. Dissolved oxygen profile 16th June 1986 10. Variation of the concentration of disolved metals with salinity 11. Cadmium accumulation 1983-1986 12. Mercury accumulation 1983-1986 13. Arsenic accumulation 1983-1986 14. Faunal data for the Humber System in 1986 POWER STATION AREA ZONED FOR ESTUARY RELATED INDUSTRY. MAJOR SEWAGE DISCHARGE - * MAJOR INDUSTRIAL DISCHARGE PORTS UNDERLINED WATER AUTHORITY BOUNDARIES. //// PRINCIPAL URBAN AREAS TIDAL LIMIT FIG. 1. THE HUMBER ESTUARY & ITS CATCHMENT. THE WATER QUALITY OF THE HUMBER ESTUARY 1986 1. INTRODUCTION 1.1 The Humber has the largest catchment of any estuary in the U.K. and is the largest single source of freshwater from the country into the North Sea. Co-ordinated monitoring of the Humber and its tidal rivers dates from the early 1960s. This report discusses the results of monitoring for 1986 in the light of the management of water quality undertaken by the Anglian, Severn-Trent and Yorkshire Water Authorities through their Humber Estuary Committee. The report considers the loads of potentially polluting materials discharged to the estuary, compliance with Environmental Quality Standards for the tidal rivers and estuary, metals in sediments and biota, benthic fauna and recent developments relevent to water quality management and monitoring. 1.2 The Humber Estuary covers the River Humber (62 km long) and its tidal rivers - The Trent, Yorkshire Ouse, Don, Aire, Wharfe and Hull (fig. 1). The total length of the tidal waters of the system is 313 km with the longest tidal run being 147 km from Spurn Head to Cromwell Weir on the Trent. At Immingham the average rise and fall in water level during the tidal cycle is about 5m, ranging from less than 2m to more than 7m at extreme neap and spring tides. The average tidal excursion in the open Humber is about 15 km, which is many times greater than the seaward displacement of the water due to freshwater flow.^ The estuary receives on average daily runoff of approximately 13,000 m from a catchment area of 24,420 km . 1.3 The Humber*s catchment has a population of 10.8m, one fifth of the U.K. population, including the cities of Birmingham, Bradford, Derby, Leeds, Leicester, Nottingham, Sheffield and Stoke-on-Trent. It contains 60% of the country*s coal production, 40% of crude steel production and 40% of the capacity of the Central Electricity Generating Board. West Yorkshire has the country*s largest concentration of wool textile industries. On the banks of the estuary are a non-ferrous metal smelter, two oil refineries (16m tonnes per annum capacity) and several chemical complexes including two plants producing titanium dioxide pigments. Food processing is particularly associated with the ports of Goole, Grimsby, Hull and Immingham. However, the banks of the Humber are not fully urbanised and large, flat sites adjacent to deep water facilities are available for the development of new ’estuary related* industries. There is also much high grade agricultural land beside the Humber. 1.4 The outer Humber supports a sea fishery and fish nursery ground plus a shellfishery. The importance of these has declined during the second half of the century, although angling interest is buoyant in the Humber, tidal Trent, tidal Wharfe and upper part of the tidal Ouse. The marshes and mudflats between Trent Falls and the Humber Bridge and at Spurn Bight include notified Sites of Special Scientific Interest of international importance for their salt marsh communities and for their population of ducks, geese and waders. Cleethorpes is a tourist resort within the esutary with a bathing beach designated under the EC Directive on the Quality of Bathing Waters. - 2 - 2. MANAGEMENT FRAMEWORK 2.1 The objectives of the Humber Estuary Committee are set out in Appendix 1. The Committee has set environmental quality objectives (EQO) related to water use, based on the recommendations of the third report of the Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution published in 1972, These are: (i) The protection of all existing defined uses of the estuary system, (ii) The ability to support on the mud bottom the biota necessary for sustaining sea fisheries. (iii) The ability to allow the passage of migratory fish at all stages of the tide. 2.2 The environmental quality standards (EQS) set for the water column, which provide numerical values for the quality determinands which define the EQOs, are also given in appendix 1. They include mandatory standards for highly toxic, persistent and bio-accumulative substances on List 1 of Directive 76/464/EEC on "Pollution caused by Certain Dangerous Substances Discharged into the Aquatic Environment of the Community", and the national standards for less dangerous "List 2" substances. 2.3 The Humber Estuary Committee's policy is that any new discharge of trade or sewage effluent should be controlled so that it does not cause the environmental quality standards to be exceeded, except within the defined "mixing zone" around the outfall. Guidelines for setting mixing zones were published by the Water Authorities Association in 1986. The policy for existing discharges is that they should be controlled so that the EQSs are fully met by 1995. 2.4 Co-ordinated monitoring of the Humber system was set up in 1961 and has been modified at intervals since then. The routine programmes now are: (i) Chemical analysis of water samples from eighteen shore stations at high and low slack water seven times per year. (ii) Continuous monitoring of dissolved oxygen at a number of locations. (iii) Chemical analysis of rivers at their tidal limits and of significant effluent discharges to the system. This is co-ordinated with monitoring of the water in the estuary, although additional samples are collected for testing compliance with effluent discharge consent conditions and other purposes. (iv) Analysis of shore and mid-estuary sediments for metals twice per year. (v) Analysis of seaweed and ragworms from the shores and shrimps from mid-estuary twice per year to determine the bio-accumulation of metals. Data on metals and toxic organic substances in fish caught in the Humber are provided by the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food. (vi) Community analysis once per year of intertidal and sub-tidal fauna at thirty-one sites. - 3 - 2.5 In addition, over the years a number of surveys across the estuary and over tidal cycles have been undertaken using boats, helicopters and hovercraft. There has also been fixed station sampling over tidal cycles and intensive surveys to establish the extent of the effluent plumes from some industrial discharges. Surveys of the sub-tidal fauna at up to seventy stations have been undertaken three times since 1977 to supplement the annual, more limited sampling programme, 2.6 A mathematical model of the Humber and tidal rivers is used to investigate the factors affecting dissolved oxygen and to simulate the impact of proposed new discharges.
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